Peso
plunges by 44 pc against dollar
Argentina’s peso tumbled as much as 44 per cent
against the dollar as exchange houses opened for the
first time since the Government said it would devalue
the currency and default on its debts. The peso
was quoted at 1.8 per dollar at money-changers in
Buenos Aires, indicating President, Mr Eduardo
Duhalde, will fail to keep it fixed at the 1.4 rate
set, traders said. Mr Duhalde gave up the one-to-one
peg to the dollar, in place for a decade, in a bid
to revive growth and rebuild confidence in the
economy.
Hundreds of depositors stood in lines at money-changers
after rioters overnight smashed bank windows and looted
stores to protest the Government's decision to freeze
more than $23 billion of savings. State-owned Banco
de la Nation, Banco de Galicia ? Buenos Aires and
others refused to sell dollars. "I just want
to get rid of my pesos," said Ms Vicente Lopez,
62, a retired engineer, as she waited to change money
at exchange house, Italtur SA. "At this
stage it is better to cut my losses and change whatever
I can for whatever price, because whichever way I
look at it, I'm going to lose."
The peso's decline was limited by the Government's
decision to reduce the amount of money in circulation
through a freeze on deposits, withdrawal restrictions
and a central bank order blocking banks from selling
the US currency via electronic transactions, analysts
said.
Forecast
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co has forecast the peso may
weaken to 2.7 per dollar by the end of this year.
In neighboring Brazil, the real strengthened
for the first day in four, as currency traders said
the peso fell less than they had expected. Most
financial transactions had been halted since food
riots toppled former President, Mr Fernando de la
Rua's Government on December 20 and killed several
people. Argentina allowed banks to set their own rates
and conduct business for the first time since then,
though many opted to wait for more direction
from the central bank on how it will clear transactions.
Argentina's stock exchange was closed for a fifth
day.
Some banks had asked the Government to extend a bank
holiday through Monday so that they would have time
to read new central bank rules, said Mr Jose Fernandez,
General Manager of ABN Amro Argentina. "Everything
is still very confusing," Mr Fernandez said.
"My recommendation to our trading desk was not
to do too much." Mr Fernandez said his traders
completed some transactions for exporters at the 1.4
peso rate.
Santander Central Hispano SA, Banco Bilbao Vizcaya
Argentaria SA, and other foreign banks in Argentina
stand to lose at least $6.2 billion as they write-off
investments in South America's second-largest
economy, Standard and Poor's analysts said on a conference
call,Vice-Economy Minister, Mr Jorge To-desca, said
a new central bank rule prohibits companies from
making payments on their dollar debts unless they
first negotiate a three-year extension on maturities.
Companies have a total $7.8 billion of foreign
debt due this year.
Mr Duhalde fixed the peso at 1.4 per dollar for banking
and trade payments and said exchange houses would
be allowed to set their own rates. Economy Ministry
officials said then that they expected the market
rate would remain close to the official rate for several
months. The International Monetary Fund advised Argentina
to let its currency float and investors have doubted
the Government would be able to maintain a fixed
rate.
There is going to be massive corruption in importing
and exporting," said Mr Jim Barrineau, Vice-President
at Alliance Capital Management, with about $6
billion under management. 'Eventually Argentina
will have to capitulate to the IMF and everything
else."
Demonstrators overnight smashed windows at banks
such as BBV Banco Francos and Banco de Galicia, looted
stores and clashed with police after the Government
announced it would freeze certificate of deposit accounts,
or more than a third of the nation's $67 billion of
savings. Thousands packed the Plaza de Mayo,
adjacent to the Presidential palace before being cleared
by police firing tear gas. The protest marked the
biggest anti-Government rallies since Mr Duhalde took
office January 1, the fifth President in the country
in two weeks.
Many Argentines said they hurried to change money
before the exchange rate fell further.
MORE ON ARGENTINA
CRISIS
January 13, 2002.
[Source: The Hindu Business Line January 13, 2002.]
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